Saint Rose of Viterbo
Virgin
(1235-1252)
O.D.M. pinxit
Saint
Rose was born in the spring of 1235 at Viterbo, capital of the
patrimony of Saint Peter. In those days the emperor Frederick II was
oppressing the Church, and many were faithless to the Holy See. But this
infant at once seemed filled with grace; she never cried; with
tottering steps she sought Jesus in His tabernacle; she knelt before
sacred images and listened to sermons and pious conversation, retaining
all she heard, and this when she was scarcely three years old. One
coarse habit covered her flesh; fasts and disciplines were her delight.
At
the age of seven she wished to enter a monastery of nuns; but God had
other designs for her, and she resolved to create a solitude in her
father's house, where she would forever spend all her days. Her
mortifications there seem incredible to our time of laxity; she gave
herself the discipline three times a day until she fainted from fatigue
and loss of blood, and she scarcely ate at all. To those who urged her
to mitigate her austerities, she explained so perfectly that happiness
consists in suffering for God, that no one could doubt this was so for
her.
Nonetheless
she fell ill and nearly died of consumption. She was close to the final
agony when suddenly she beheld the Mother of God, and said to those
attending her: All of you here, why do you not greet the Queen of the
world? Do you not see Mary, the August Mother of my God, coming forward?
Let us go to meet Her, and prostrate ourselves before Her majesty!
Everyone turned toward the door and knelt down, and the Mother of God
spoke to Rose, telling her she must enter the Third Order of Saint
Francis, then go out to reprove, convince, exhort and bring back the
erring to the paths of salvation. If your endeavors bring upon you
sarcasm and mockery, persecution and labor, you must bear them
patiently... Those who assist you will be enriched with all the graces
of the Lord.
To
defend the Church's rights was already Rose's burning wish. When hardly
ten years old, she arose after her reception into the Franciscan habit,
went down to the public square at Viterbo, called upon the inhabitants
to be faithful to the Sovereign Pontiff, and vehemently denounced all
his opponents. She returned to her house only to redouble her
flagellations and macerations; she saw her Saviour on the Cross and
nothing could arrest her ardor thereafter. So great was the power of her
word and of the miracles which accompanied it, that at the end of
several months the Imperial party, after threatening her in vain to stop
her preaching, in fear and anger drove her from the city.
Saint
Rose and her parents moved to Soriano, a fortified city, where she
continued to do as she had been told by the Mother of God. Then Rose
went on by herself to Vitorchiano, where she had understood there was
need for her, and continued to win souls by her aspect as much as by her
words. She went barefoot and wore a poor tunic at all times, until
after some eighteen months, when the emperor had died, she and her
parents returned to Viterbo. Innocent IV was brought back in triumph to
Rome and the cause of God was won.
A
number of young girls came to her for instruction at Viterbo, and she
taught them the principles of modest prudence and faithful love of God.
Rose fell ill again and recognized that her end was approaching; she
prepared, rejoicing, in solitude for her glorious destiny, and died in
her eighteenth year. Not long afterward, she appeared in glory to
Alexander IV, and bade him to translate her intact body. He found it
fragrant and beautiful, as if still in life. For more than 700 years it
has remained supple and unchanged, save for its color, darkened after a
fire in the chapel where it reposed.
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